NTA Joins the Fight, Goes to Rally in Albany
NYSUT President Dick Iannuzzi made the call and NTA answered. On June 8th 28 NTA members boarded a bus to head to Albany to the “One Voice United” Rally, sponsored by the New York State United Teachers and more than one dozen other education, labor, community, business and faith based organizations. The focus of the rally was on the state’s over-emphasis on standardized testing and increasing power of giant testing companies over education policy.
EMUFT member John Fike raises money for student scholarhips
John Fike, a part-time lecturer in the Political Science Department, is planning a 450-mile cycling trip to raise money for student scholarhips. He will begin the 12-day trip with his wife in Lansing on June 29. You can follow him on Facebook at the Michigan Bike Tour to Benefit EMU Students Facebook page.
Read more about John's journey on annarbor.com and the EMU press release about John's trip, and support John's fundraiser through the EMU Foundation website.
AS BOARD APPROVES AGREEMENT, NESHAMINY TEACHERS SAY VOTE MEANS FRESH START FOR EDUCATORS AND COMMUNITY
School Board Endorses Deal 9-0 Following NFT’s Ratification Last Week
LANGHORNE, PA (June 13, 2013) — Leaders of the Neshaminy Federation of Teachers said tonight’s School Board’s 9-0 unanimous vote to approve the agreement on terms for a new contract with teachers should bring a fresh start for NFT members, the school district and the community.
“After more than five years of difficult and sometimes divisive negotiations, we are thrilled to conclude this process with an agreement that enables everyone on both sides to refocus and recommit ourselves to strengthening our community as a place where everyone is proud to say I live and work and learn in Neshaminy,” said NFT President Louise Boyd.
“We all agree that educating Neshaminy children is our most important responsibility,” she said. “For teachers, the students in our classrooms are what sustained us through many tough circumstances.
“This agreement is a chance for everyone devoted to the success of Neshaminy students—teachers, administrators, parents and community members—to come together and make a fresh start on fulfilling that mission,” Boyd added. “Everyone worked hard to make sure we found solutions to issues raised by both sides so that we can now move forward together.”
NFT leaders noted that it has been a week of events that signify new beginnings, including Neshaminy High School’s commencement exercises on Wednesday.
“Teachers are so proud of Neshaminy’s newest graduates,” said NFT Vice President Anne Schmidt. “We have watched many of them grow and achieve new things since they were in Elementary school. And just as they are commencing the next phase of their lives, it is time for our whole community to move ahead and begin a new chapter in the life of our school district.”
NFT members ratified the deal in an overwhelming 487 to 21 vote on June 3. The new agreement runs through June 2015 and replaces the previous contract, which expired at the end of June 2008. Many teachers expressed their satisfaction at having a new agreement in place.
“What excites me most about a contract settlement is that the community, the teachers, and the board have the opportunity to move forward and refocus our energy 100 percent on the students and programs,” said Cara DeLorenzo, who teaches Spanish at Neshaminy High School. “My hope for our future is that positive morale is restored and that we realize working together and respecting each other’s essential roles in the district is the most powerful and effective way to reach our goals as a district.”
NFT leaders highlighted some of the terms that will be part of the new contract:
- The same class size limits as in previous contracts, along with new language addressing class size limits for classes serving special education students.
- A new salary schedule with compensation levels that will enable the Neshaminy district to continue to attract and retain good teachers.
- Mechanisms that guarantee teachers’ input and an important role in school committees, so that teachers’ professional expertise will continue to help shape education in Neshaminy schools. Teachers can continue to advocate for what students need, while recognizing that management has the final decision-making authority—as has been the case.
- Provisions folding in some aspects of previous memoranda of understanding into the new agreement, thus maintaining operational stability achieved through solutions that were carefully created by earlier administrations, teachers and staff.
- Language extending retirement benefits and conditions to all certified staff members who gave notice of retirement effective at the end of the school year—a commitment both sides felt it was important to honor.
Teachers and other certified staff said the agreement achieved a balance of educational values, financial considerations and professional standards, while acknowledging that there were some tough tradeoffs involved, including significant new costs to teachers for the District’s health insurance plan.
“In the end, this is about moving forward,” Boyd said. “The agreement honors our commitment to remain a key force in advocacy for students. We will continue working alongside parents and other community members to maintain transparent and responsible governance of our schools.”
Wisconsin Coalition of Annuitants
The Wisconsin Coalition of Annuitants (WCOA) is a group of organizations representing retirees and active participants in the Wisconsin Retirement System. AFT-Wisconsin is a member and our representatives are Buzz Davies and Bob Beglinger. Buzz is a former WPEC member and Bob is a former teacher from the Eau Claire area. The annual meetings are a great opportunity to get input from leaders from the State Investment Board (SWIB), Employee Trust Funds (ETF), the Legislature and other areas. To learn more about the Coalition, go to www.wicoa.org.
Call Me Jr.(past president) By Kirk Wilkins
Thank you for your support and encouragement during the past year. I hope that you will continue to support the 2013-14 Chapter executive board by attending Chapter meetings and participating in Chapter committees. The more members who participate the more effective the Chapter can be in delivering the kind of representation the membership deserves. The more you participate the more the Chapter reflects you. Please help us to shape a better workplace, a better community, and a better world.
20,000 Attend Albany One Voice Rally
Brothers and Sisters,
Yesterday, nearly 20,000 people - educators, parents and students from New York - convened in Albany for a very successful NYSUT-sponsored rally to provide voice to problems with high-stakes testing and tax cap. We are proud to have had RVCTA members from all levels actively participate in the rally.
District Reorganization and Tier III Flexibility Transfers
The School Board recently approved the attached District reorganization plan at the May 14 school board meeting. The Superintendent claimed it will only cost $29,000 from the general fund. He is relying heavily on Program Improvement funds. This growth in upper-level bureaucracy is a clear sign that the District has money. However, wIll the Distirct now bring back all the services that have been cut over the last four years? We are still not operating at the same capacity we were at before the economic crisis of the the last few years. More disconcerting was the entire Board's silence
NYSUT First Book
Completed forms can be forwarded to the NYSUT Regional Office or sent to Brad Crooks at Leary. First Book will then notify the individual via e-mail how the program operates, how to register, etc.
LFT reacts to adoption of state budget
Federation pleased with 2.75% growth factor for public schools
(Baton Rouge - June 6, 2013) After a four-year drought, educators are pleased that the legislature is including a 2.75% inflation factor – about $69 million – in the education budget for 2013-14, according to Louisiana Federation of Teachers President Steve Monaghan.